Top 114 Quotes & Sayings by E-40

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician E-40.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
E-40

Earl Tywone Stevens Sr., better known by his stage name E-40, is an American rapper. He is a founding member of the rap group the Click, and the founder of Sick Wid It Records. He has released 28 studio albums to date, appeared on numerous movie soundtracks, and has also done guest appearances on a host of other rap albums. Initially an underground artist, his 1995 solo album In a Major Way opened him up to a wider audience. Beginning in 1998, he began collaborating with mainstream rappers outside the San Francisco Bay Area. He rose to higher mainstream popularity in 2006 with his single "Tell Me When to Go", which was produced by Lil Jon.

A lot of people - they might think I fell off, but they don't know I'm eating. I'm on the West coast, eating. It's just they don't hear about me because they don't see me on the TV. But I'm still around.
There's always a message in my music, you just gotta be able to just sit there and be open-minded.
I really started from grassroots, without a handout or anything. — © E-40
I really started from grassroots, without a handout or anything.
When I had my house in '96, I had a Warriors basketball court built.
Ebonics is me. I'm the king of slang, hands down.
I've got a big heart and I believe in good karma.
I just love sports.
My momma was working very hard, doing three jobs... she just worked her butt off, man. On the weekends she started to play this song called 'Living for the Weekend.'
I just respect people and mind my business. I don't got time to worry about what the next man's pockets are looking like, I gotta worry about what mine are looking like and my family.
I always stay humble. I don't act funny towards nobody.
I'm what they call an intelligent hoodlum.
I might like the Sacramento Kings. One of my favorite players is Dirk Nowitzki.
I think the whole world has been able to utilize the Internet. I feel like you don't have to be from a certain soil. — © E-40
I think the whole world has been able to utilize the Internet. I feel like you don't have to be from a certain soil.
Sometimes all your fanbase wants you to do is stay within your envelope and do you because that's what they love you for.
It's like with me, I feel like I was never one of those rappers that, you know, stayed in one time warp.
I feel like I'm a voice of hope.
I got a great imagination, and I pay close attention to my surroundings and I'm very observant.
I'm glad I'm setting an example for the younger generation so in the future they can say, 'Look how long E-40's rap career was. Look how long he stayed relevant.'
I looked up to Too Short before I was making my own music.
I love mayonnaise, but mustard is a must when you're doing the Impossible Burger.
Me and Master P go way back.
I'm just a storyteller.
Slang is really coded talk. I can say a few things, in front of somebody, that only people who know what I'm saying are going to pick up on.
I'm a survivor, man. I done had my ups and downs, but I've got get-back skills for real for real. I refuse to fall.
However God had it planned, I'm rockin' with how he do it. He took the steering wheel and I'm letting him drive.
I was the class clown when I was a little young mustache.
I had every major label in the world - I mean, any label that dealt with rap music wanted to sign me. I ended up going with Jive Records because I liked everything about 'em.
I don't get inspired by too many people because I like uniqueness. I'm a unique dude.
I love gospel music, I love gangsta music.
When I do listen to music a lot of times I listen to old school music, I'm talking about Earth, Wind & Fire, I'm talking about the Isley Brothers, the O'Jays. It just eases my mind.
In the '80s, I wore these glasses because I was trying to look like a square to outsmart the po-po, you feel me? It was what we call 'throw off methods.' So I wear little glasses.
I'm not a full-fledged producer, but I can be one if I want to really spend my time on straight being a producer.
I used to burn rubber at every light, mean mugging everything there was, cause that was my attitude.
I'm definitely underrated. By far.
I'm always giving life lessons in my music.
I used to love Talking Heads, Peter Gabriel, and the Human League.
I got a solid fan base and they love me and I love them. They know I'ma give them what they want to hear.
When I was little, seven or eight years old, in third and fourth grade, I would always try to use long words and stuff. — © E-40
When I was little, seven or eight years old, in third and fourth grade, I would always try to use long words and stuff.
I feel like this - everybody, every rapper to me, I feel like every rapper got a little bit of E-40 in them, whether they know it or not.
I first started rapping when I heard the Sugarhill Gang in 1979, when I was 11 years old in seventh grade.
As you get older, you start trying to eat a little bit better, and just do a little better.
I don't listen to rap all the time. Even though I rap, rap can be nerve-wracking.
The earliest music I remember hearing is Al Green's 'Let's Stay Together.' That was when my momma and my daddy were together, before they went their separate ways.
Whether you're a DJ, whether you a rapper, whether you a producer, take it seriously. This is an occupation - you can get paid - don't expect to blow up overnight, and appreciate when you do get paid any type of money, appreciate it.
I've got songs that'll make a gangster cry.
I don't wanna be like everybody else, I don't wanna rap like everybody else.
As long as I've got my life, health and strength, and I'm in my right mind? I'mma get money.
I'm living proof that there's no age limit to rapping. — © E-40
I'm living proof that there's no age limit to rapping.
Music is very therapeutic and healing, and I hit it from all angles.
My voice gon' stick out like a turd in a punch bowl.
When you do mixtapes, a lot of times your fanbase can say, 'We've been getting this for free for so many years, his new album is about to drop, we've listened to it, and we're not going to buy it. We'll download it for free.'
I started playing drums in the 4th grade.
Rick Barry always amazed me - he was one of the best free-throw shooters of all time, and he used to throw it underhand.
I'll rock with anyone - vintage rappers, young dudes, anyone.
I don't just talk about jewelry and cars and houses and belittling those that don't have that. I'm a democrat. I speak for the democrats. I speak for the soil.
I'm a corporate thug. That's the best way to be.
I've been in the game a long time. I've done all sorts of different types of music. From mob music to the G-Funk era.
For the first six years of my career I was independent. I got on to a major and did my thing there. I had platinum and gold records and all that.
When I was 20, I was the hustler - rubbing my temples, stressed, trying to get out the streets, trying to take my life to another side of the game with something I really loved to do: rap music.
Longevity has a lot to do with me continuously nonstop putting music on the shelf, and making myself be the face of the Bay, and continuing to carry the Bay on my back for many moons, you know.
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